Abstract

Cardiac fibrosis is a key pathological link of various cardiovascular diseases to heart failure. It is of great significance to deeply understand the development process of cardiac fibrosis and the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved. Macrophages play a special role in promoting heart development, maintaining myocardial cell homeostasis and heart function. They are involved in the whole process from inflammatory to cardiac fibrosis. This article summarizes the relationship between inflammation and fibrosis, discusses the bidirectional regulation of cardiac fibrosis by macrophages and analyses the functional heterogeneity of macrophages from different sources. It is believed that CCR2– cardiac resident macrophages can promote cardiac function, but the recruitment and infiltration of CCR2+ cardiac non-resident macrophages aggravate cardiac dysfunction and heart remodeling. After heart injury, damage associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) are released in large quantities, and the inflammatory signal mediated by macrophage chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) promotes the infiltration of CCR2+ monocytes and transforms into macrophages in the heart. These CCR2+ non-resident macrophages not only replace part of the CCR2– resident macrophage subpopulation in the heart, but also cause cardiac homeostasis and hypofunction, and release a large number of mediators that promote fibroblast activation to cause cardiac fibrosis. This article reveals the cell biology mechanism of resident and non-resident macrophages in regulating cardiac fibrosis. It is believed that inhibiting the infiltration of cardiac non-resident macrophages and promoting the proliferation and activation of cardiac resident macrophages are the key to improving cardiac fibrosis and improving cardiac function.

Highlights

  • Cardiac fibrosis is due to excessive activation of cardiac fibroblasts and differentiation into myofibroblasts, which secrete a large number of collagen fibers and excessive deposition, and is accompanied by the death of cardiomyocytes, which results in poor remodeling of the heart

  • It can differentiate into myofibroblasts, which lead to fibrosis by secreting collagen to deposit extracellular matrix (ECM)

  • Non-resident macrophages infiltrate massively and continuously replace resident macrophages during cardiac injury caused by myocardial infarction, long-term hypertension or other diseases. This led to a dramatic decrease in the number of resident macrophages in the heart [82], and a marked increase in the number of non-resident macrophages, which resulted in disruption of myocardial homeostasis and inhibition of cardiac function [10, 52]

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiac fibrosis is due to excessive activation of cardiac fibroblasts and differentiation into myofibroblasts, which secrete a large number of collagen fibers and excessive deposition, and is accompanied by the death of cardiomyocytes, which results in poor remodeling of the heart. Restraining excessive and persistent inflammation and inhibiting the over-activation of fibroblasts at the appropriate time is one of the effective ways to resolve cardiac fibrosis and achieve optimal repair of tissue and function. The monocyte-derived macrophages are formed after birth from monocytes in the peripheral blood under the influence of chemokines and inflammatory factors through the CCR2 receptor on the cell membrane to infiltrate and differentiate into the heart during the developmental stage [6, 53, 54].

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